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Hungry Herd descends on Loomis

Four-legged snackers will clear underbrush, one mouthful at a time

-Messenger photo by Joe Sutter
Doug Bartels, of Lytton, examines the herd of goats he’s renting out to Loomis Park in Fort Dodge. The goats aren’t any one breed, Bartels said. Some of them are a mix of Boer, some Saanen, some Kiko, and some are dairy goats.

The weed-covered hillsides in Loomis Park are getting a cleanup this month from 68 goats.

The Hungry Herd from Lytton was dropped off around 11:45 a.m. by Doug and Jamie Bartels.

They’ve been renting out the goats to cities and other areas for about four years now. The family also farms. Jamie Bartels is a teacher, and Doug does turkey chores for an outfit in Nemaha.

“We stay pretty busy,” Doug Bartels said. “This is the funnest thing we do.”

The goats stepped off their trailer into a roughly five-acre area in the park that’s been surrounded by a temporary electrified fence. There are also security cameras set up to keep an eye on the animals.

-Messenger photo by Joe Sutter
Jamie Bartels, of Lytton, moves her goat herd this way in the temporarily fenced-off grazing area at Loomis Park. The goats will be around for about a month, eating the leafy weeds and clearing more space for the grass and trees to grow.

The fence will be moved to other areas within the 40-acre park as time passes, Doug Bartels said. He plans to leave the goats here until the end of the month.

“Basically, on a deal like this where it’s overgrown, we bring them in, section it off, and they basically just eat and clean it up,” Doug Bartels said. “It’s a win-win situation for both parties. It’s not very labor-intensive. As soon as we get the fence up, the goats do most of the work.”

“Trying to get rid of all those invasive plants that don’t let the grass grow,” Jamie Bartels said. “Hopefully it brings more people to the park and makes the park a little prettier.”

Monday morning was perfect weather for moving animals too, with no rain but cooler temperatures. The goats, including 16 kids, got right to work munching the underbrush, although they were a little shy about posing for pictures.

“They are definitely working animals. Not pets,” Jamie Bartels said.

-Messenger photo by Joe Sutter
Goats from the Hungry Herd are already hard at work behind their electrified fence in Loomis Park. The portable fence both keeps the goats enclosed and keeps them safe. While they aren’t pets, visitors to the park are more than welcome to stop by and watch as the animals clear out the underbrush in Loomis throughout June.

“The more people come to view them is awesome. We enjoy that and encourage that,” said Doug Bartels. “We do ask that you stay back, and keep dogs on a leash. Obviously the fence is energized, so don’t try to get inside the enclosure or anything like that.”

“They’re fun to watch, for sure,” Jamie Bartels said.

The goats prefer to eat the broadleaf plants that park managers consider weeds, Doug Bartels said. They’ll only munch on the grass if there aren’t enough weeds left. They eat poison ivy without any problems too, and usually aren’t bothered by thorns and thistles.

“They don’t mess with the good grasses, and the good trees,” said Dennis Schulte, who is with the Fort Dodge Parks Foundation.

Schulte recently retired from the USDA’s National Resource Conservation Service.

-Messenger photo by Joe Sutter
About 68 goats are now hard at work on the slopes of Loomis Park, clearing away underbrush and invasive species. Doug and Jamie Bartels of Lytton rent out the grazers as the Hungry Herd to cities all over Iowa.

“I used to be the district conservationist for this county. Then I was transferred to Sac and Calhoun county. These people are from Calhoun County,” Schulte said. “I ran into them different places, and they would talk about the goat projects, doing brush control with cities and so forth.

“I always thought about Loomis because when I was the conservationist over here I was active with the group doing the restoration of the park. I was one of the members along with Jeff (Becker) here that cleared this the hard way — chainsaws, and dragging it. We’ve gotten too old to be doing that now.”

If things go well, Schulte hopes goats could be brought to other parks in Fort Dodge for a cleanup.

“We’ve got all these parks in Fort Dodge that could really use it,” he said. “This is a trial.”

The parks foundation is a nonprofit organization. It funded the Hungry Herd through donations. The city didn’t pay to bring them in, Schulte said.

-Messenger photo by Joe Sutter
Jamie Bartels with her son Jack, 2, watch the goats Jamie and Doug Bartels delivered to Loomis Park Monday morning.

Doug and Jamie Bartels started renting out their goats when they saw how well the goats could clean their own property.

“We had some, they cleaned up an area on our place first, then we moved them to some neighbors,” Doug Bartels said.

“We just kind of had a thought one night — let’s try to make this a business,” Jamie Bartels said. “It’s been working out pretty good ever since.”

“We’re getting a little bigger every year,” Doug Bartels said.

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